United Transportation Union Lodge Number 550 v. Rock Brief in Opposition to Certiorari
Public Court Documents
October 2, 1972
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Brief Collection, LDF Court Filings. United Transportation Union Lodge Number 550 v. Rock Brief in Opposition to Certiorari, 1972. 7eeb23f2-c79a-ee11-be36-6045bdeb8873. LDF Archives, Thurgood Marshall Institute. https://ldfrecollection.org/archives/archives-search/archives-item/2573b5c3-902f-48d1-844d-0fc252beee2a/united-transportation-union-lodge-number-550-v-rock-brief-in-opposition-to-certiorari. Accessed December 04, 2025.
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I n the
Bupnmz (Enurt at % U n ited S t a t e s
October Term 1972
No. 72-1436
U nited T ransportation U nion L odge N um ber 550, et al.,
Petitioners,
—vs.—
R obert R ock , et al.,
Respondents.
BRIEF IN OPPOSITION TO CERTIORARI
V ictor J . A she
Suite 702
Plaza One
Norfolk, Virginia
R obert B elton
237 West Trade Street
Charlotte, North Carolina
J ack G reenberg
W illiam L . R obinson
M orris J . B aller
10 Columbus Circle
Suite 2030
New York, New York 10019
Attorneys for Respondents
I N D E X
PAGE
Question Presented for Review ...................................... 1
Statement of the Case....... ............................................... 1
A rg u m en t ......................................................................................... 8
Conclusion ............................... 17
Certificate of Service ........................................................
Cases:
T able of A uthorities
Bailey v. American Tobacco Co., 462 F.2d 160 (6th
Cir. 1972) ............. ..................................................... 16
Griggs v. Duke Power Company, 401 TJ.S. 424 (1971) 11
Griggs v. Duke Power Company, 420 F.2d 1225 (4th
Cir. 1970) .................................................................. 16
Local 189, United Papermakers and Paperworkers v.
United States, 416 F.2d 980 (5th Cir. 1969), cert,
denied 397 U.S. 919 (1970) ....................... .............10,16
Quarles v. Philip Morris, Inc., 279 F.Supp. 505 (E.D.
Va. 1968) ............................................ 15
Railroad Trainmen v. United States, 41 LW 3377
(1973) ................................................... 15
Robinson v. Lorillard Corp., 444 F.2d 791 (4th Cir.
1971), cert, dismissed 404 U.S. 1006 (1971) ........ 11,16
United States v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., 444 F.2d 652
(2nd Cir. 1971) ....................................................... 11,16
11
PA G E
United States v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co., 471
F.2d 582 (4th Cir. 1972), cert, denied 41 LW 3554
(1973) .............................................. .........8,10,11,14,16
United States v. Hayes International Corp., 456 F.2d
112 (5th Cir. 1972) ........... ......................................u , 16
United States v. Jacksonville Terminal Co., 451 F.2d
418 (5th Cir. 1971), cert, denied 31 L.Ed. 815
(!972) .......... -....... -..... - ................................. ...11,14,16
United States v. N.L. Industries, Inc.,------F.2d -------,
5 EPD 1T8529 (8th Cir. No. 72-1143, March 28,
1973) ............... ...... ............................ ............... 11,15,16
United States v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co.,
464 F.2d 301 (8th Cir. en banc 1972), cert, denied
41 LW 3377 (1973) ............... ...........................11,14,15
Statutes and Other Authorities:
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
42 U.S.C. §§2000e et seq. ...
42 U.S.C. §§2000e-2(h) .......
Employer’s Liability Act
45 U.S.C. §§ 51 et seq. ........................................ 12
Seniority Discrimination and the Incumbent Negro,
80 Harv. L. Rev. 1260 (1967) ................ ................ 10
.passim
.... 2
..... 3
In the
S u p r e m e (Enurt 0! tljp Hniti'i*
October Term 1972
No. 72-1436
U nited T ransportation U nion L odge N um ber 550, et al.,
—vs.—■
Petitioners,
R obert R ock , et al.,
Respondents.
BRIEF IN OPPOSITION TO CERTIORARI
Question Presented for Review
Where a railroad employer has practiced racial discrim
ination in hiring and initial job assignment of employees
into separate, racially identifiable yards, and railroad and
unions have locked these employees into the separate, segre
gated yards by means of a restrictive seniorit}1- system, was
it error for the court of appeals to order as its Title VII
remedy a merger of the separate seniority units on the
customary basis of “ Company seniority” !
Statement of the Case
A. Statement of Proceedings
Respondents filed this action in the United States Dis
trict Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, Norfolk
Division, on June 2, 1969, and amended their complaint on
2
December 30, 1969 (11).1 In the complaint as amended
Respondents Robert Rock, Ezell B. Johnson, and Russell
C. Walker (hereafter “plaintiffs” ) sued under Title VII of
the 1964 Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C. §§2000e el seq., to en
join practices of employment discrimination by Petitioner
United Transportation Union Lodge Number 550 (here
after “Lodge 550” ), Petitioner United Transportation
Union (hereafter “UTU” ), and the Norfolk and Western
Railway Company (hereafter “N & W ” )2 * and to obtain
other appropriate relief from those practices (4-10). The
plaintiffs sought specifically to enjoin and remedy the de
fendants’ maintenance of racially separate work areas and
seniority rosters, defendants’ seniority system which per
petuated the racially segregated areas and rosters, and de
fendants’ denial to black workers of equal opportunities
for regular work, advancement, training, and assignment
to more desirable jobs in the Norfolk Terminal Yards (id.).
The case was filed, tried, and decided as a class action on
behalf of all black employees similarly situated to plaintiffs
and members of the plaintiff UTU Lodge Number 974 (21).s
The district court tried the action on April 13-16, 1971,
and on January 20, 1972 handed down its Memorandum
Opinion (A. 1-21).4 The court found that the defendants
had practiced past and present discrimination in the hiring
and initial assignment of employees (A. 11-15) and in main-
1 All page citations in this form are to pages of the Respondents’
(Appellants’ ) Appendix on Appeal to the Fourth Circuit,
2 Lodge 550, UTU, and N&W will be referred to collectively
herein as “ defendants.”
This lodge, which was virtually all-black, is no longer in exis
tence. The district court ordered it merged into the predominately
white lodge 550 (A. 18-19). This ruling was affirmed on appeal
and is not challenged in this Court,
4 Citations in the form of “A . ------ ” are to pages of the Appendix
to the Petition for a Writ of Certiorari.
3
taming certain barriers to the promotion of black workers
to higher paying and more desirable positions (A. 15, 20).
It further found that UTU had discriminated against black
members by maintaining separate, racially segregated local
lodges (A. 17-18). The district court ordered apparently
adequate relief with respect to those discriminatory prac
tices, which is incorporated in its Amended Decree entered
April 28, 1972 (A. 22-35).
With respect to the defendants’ seniority arrangements
which is the heart of this case, however, the district court
made no explicit finding of discrimination. It apparently
based the failure to find discrimination on a finding that
the black and white yards involved entirely different
“crafts” and work (A. 15-17, 19), and that the defendants’
seniority system was “bona fide” , cf. 42 U.S.C. §2000e-2(h)
(A. 16, 19). The court nevertheless ordered the seniority
barriers between the black and white yards partially re
duced by means of a merger of the “top and bottom” type
(A. 19); and in the April 28, 1972 decree it incorporated
such a plan drawn up by the defendants (A. 23, 36-39).
Finally, the district court denied plaintiffs’ request for back
pay and awarded them $15,000 as counsel fees (A. 20-21,
34-35).
Plaintiffs appealed to the Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit on May 8, 1972 (78) and all defendants
cross-appealed on May 22, 1972 (79-80). Plaintiffs sought
a more adequate seniority remedy of the “dovetailing”
type, instead of the “top and bottom” plan, as well as back
pay and an additional amount as attorney’s fees. Defendant
N&W sought to reduce the award of attorney’s fees and to
require a greater share thereof from the union defendants.
Defendants UTU and Lodge 550 also attacked the attorney’s
fee award, but principally sought to contest even the limited
4
and partial relief granted by the district court with respect
to discrimination in promotion opportunities.
The court of appeals issued its opinion on February 13,
1972 (A. 40-55). It affirmed the district court’s finding of
hiring discrimination (A. 47-48) and its conclusion that the
maintenance of segregated lodges violated Title YII (A.
53). It further found the district court’s seniority remedy
inadequate, as plaintiffs contended, and ordered that the
“dovetailing” remedy be substituted for the “top and bot
tom” plan (A. 48-53).6 In its discussion of the seniority
remedy issue, the court of appeals strongly rejected the
lower court’s conclusion that the black and white jobs were
dissimilar (A. 50-51). The court of appeals found that no
legitimate reasons of business necessity warranted denial
of the “dovetailing” remedy, and that “ such merger is an
appropriate remedy under the circumstances of this case”
(A. 51). The court of appeals also added the following
instructions to guide the district court’s formulation of the
dovetailing remedy on remand:
A single terminal seniority roster would necessarily
provide for the preservation of the rights of all incum
bent employees at both yards and would permit no
displacement of incumbent employees. It would be lim
ited in operation to bidding for future vacancies in
either yard and, as plaintiffs concede, would remain
subject to the overriding consideration of basic job
competency. With particular reference to the right of
Barney Yard brakemen to qualify for promotion to
conductors, any decree should, while protecting Barney
Yard brakemen from prejudice in connection with pro
motion to this higher classification, not give such
men any higher or broader rights than those enjoyed
6 This is the only aspect of the Fourth Circuit’s order of which
the Petition for a Writ of Certiorari seeks review.
5
or granted to OT Yard brakemen, who had qualified
for promotion to conductors. Recognizing the com
plexities of railroad employment, the actual formula
tion of the specific terms and provisions of a merged
terminal seniority roster, covering both yards, should
be the task of the District Court, which could, before
so doing, afford the parties themselves an opportunity
to submit their own proposed “dove-tailing” merger
plans. (A. 52)
The court of appeals remanded the back pay and attorney’s
fees issues to the district court for reconsideration (A.
53-55). It rejected sub-silentio both cross-appeals.
Lodge 550 and the UTTT sought and, on March 9, 1973,
obtained a stay of the Fourth Circuit’s mandate (A. 56).
The Petition for Certiorari was filed on or about April 20,
1973.
B. Brief Summary of Facts
At its Norfolk, Virginia Terminal, defendant N & W
maintains two adjacent terminal yards—the Barney Yard,
which is limited solely to coal-dumping operations, and the
much larger CT Yard, which handles a variety of freight,
including coal (A. 43). As the Petitioners readily concede,
“ The facts are clear that the CT Yard is primarily white
and the Barney Yard is primarily black” (Petition at 10).6
6 In fact, the statistics were (30-31) :
Barney Yard
White employees Black employees
July, 1965 3 173
January, 1971 9 131
CT Yard
July, 1965 299 3
January, 1971 363 15
6
The court of appeals, in affirming the district court’s find
ing of Title VII violations, correctly attributed the exis
tence of this extreme degree of segregation in the first
instance to N&W’s discriminatory hiring practices (A.
44-45, 48).
Operating employees in both Yards are classified in any
of three jobs: brakeman, conductor, or ear retarder oper
ator. Beginning with brakeman, these three jobs form a
promotional sequence with increasing rates of pay. Hourly
or daily pay rates are the same for both Yards in each
classification (A. 44). Within each yard, the racial compo
sition of each job classification reflects the racially uniform
character of the Yard (30-31).
The seniority structure of the yards exactly parallels the
lines dividing the two yards (A. 44)—and, not coincident-
ally, the two races.7 Thus, the court of appeals found,
employees’
seniority rights, also, attach only to the yard in which
they were originally employed and are not exercisable
in the other contiguous yard. Thus, an employee in the
Barney Yard has seniority rights in that yard, dating
from the time of his employment in that yard, but has
no seniority rights in the CT Yard. (A. 44)
As a practical matter, since “ seniority rights are the most
important property in the professional life of a railroad
man” (Petition at 12), this dual seniority system effectively
blocked any movement by black Barney Yard employees
into the nearly all-white CT Yard. The disincentive to
transfer results from the fact that, in the dual system, a
7 The unlawful division of the UTU employees into two racially
segregated local lodges also followed the lines of the Barney Yard/
CT Yard separation (A. 44).
7
Barney Yard man would have to give up his seniority and
enter the CT Yard as a new man, in order to transfer. This
barrier becomes particularly restrictive for the more senior
black workers. In fact, only two or three of the younger
Barney Yard workers had ever transferred to the CT Yard.
Although the district court purported to hold this system
as lawful, it ordered the two seniority rosters “ topped and
bottomed” . In granting the more effective “dovetailing”
remedy sought by plaintiffs, the court of appeals neces
sarily accepted as its predicate that the seniority system
was unlawful.
Barney Yard and CT Yard jobs are not only separate,
but also unequal. Plaintiffs produced detailed statistical
evidence, which was fully confirmed by competent testi
mony, proving that:
i) Work is more plentiful in the CT Yard than in the
Barney Yard. Consequently, Barney Yard men have less
job security and less regular work, suffer more frequent
layoff (or “furlough” ),8 and make less overtime.
ii) Promotions from brakeman to the higher positions
come more quickly and frequently in the CT Yard than in
the Barney Yard. A substantially higher proportion of the
CT Yard men have attained promoted status and work in
promoted positions on a given day.9 Promotion comes far
sooner in the career of a CT Yard worker than for his
8 See, e.g. 98-99, 167, 174-175, 186-187, 231-232, 522-524, 552-554
558-562, 775, 854-904.
9 See, e.g. 29-31, 805-823, 824-853, 776. In 1971 about 55.5% of
the CT Yard men had promoted status, compared to only 27.1%
of Barney Yard men. On two randomly chosen 1971 dates, about
four and six times as many CT Yard men, overall, actually worked
in promoted positions.
Barney Yard counterpart.10 The district court found dis
crimination inherent in these facts, in that Barney Yard
men were, relative to CT Yard workers “locked out” of
promoted positions (A. 15, 20).11
iii) As a result of the disparities summarized in (i) and
(ii) above, CT Yard workers enjoy higher income than
Barney Yard men, as N & W’s counsel admitted at post-
trial argument (777).
The defendants did not contest the proof of inequality
summarized in the preceding three paragraphs.
ARGUMENT
The Petitioners raise, in two different formulations, a
single question: whether the broad instructions of the court
of appeals as to the proper seniority remedy for defen
dants’ unlawful practices were improper. The remedy as
to the seniority issue is the only aspect of the Fourth Cir
cuit’s order from which Petitioners seek review.12 Contrary
to Petitioners’ position, the dovetailing remedy was a fully
proper minimal seniority remedy.
1. A brief summary of the differences between “topping
and bottoming” and “dovetailing” clearly shows why the
10 Typically, CT Yard men were promoted after as little as three
years, and an average of six to seven years. Barney Yard men had
to wait 13-15 years. (776, 805-823; cf. 708, 718 to 207, 768, 771,
84-85, 198, 360).
11 The district court also found discrimination in the nearly total
(one of 18) absence of blacks from the non-union supervisory posi
tion of Yardmaster [trainmaster], to which seniority is not strictly
relevant (A. 15, 20).
12 This Court has recently refused to review this issue on sub
stantially the same facts in United States v. Chesapeake and, Ohio
Railway Company, 471 F.2d 582 (4th Cir. 1972) cert, denied 41
Law Week 3554 (1973).
9
Court of Appeals was compelled to find the former inade
quate and the latter necessary. The court of appeals aptly
summarized the pertinent differences
In [topping and bottoming], each employee would re
tain his existing position on the seniority roster of the
yard where he is presently employed and would be
placed at the bottom of the roster in the other yard
as to the date of the merger. This would mean the
continuance of two seniority rosters; for example a
Barney brakeman with ten years’ seniority at such
yard would retain that seniority in the Barney Yard
but would acquire seniority at the CT Yard only as of
the date of the merger. . . . Railroad employment is
contracting and the opening up of new jobs is becom
ing increasingly rare. If a Barney Yard brakeman
were to be relegated to the bottom of the seniority
list at the CT Yard, it is unlikely that he would ever
find an acceptable opening at the CT Yard which he
could claim under the seniority rights that would be
given him at the CT Yard. For these reasons, the
plaintiffs press for what they call a “dove-tailing” form
of merger of the two seniority rosters. Such a merg
ing would create a single terminal seniority roster for
both yards, thereby permitting the employees at both
yards to compete for any job vacancies at either yard
on the basis of their terminal (as distinguished from
yard) seniority, established by the date of their em
ployment. (A 48-49)
After noting the essential differences, the court of ap
peals correctly stated, “It cannot be gainsaid that the relief
demanded by the plaintiffs would more effectively remove
the effects of the unlawful discrimination than that granted
by the limited change made in the seniority systems in the
two yards by the District Court” (A. 50). None of the
10
defendants, including Petitioners here, has anywhere ques
tioned the accuracy of this assessment.13 The district court
apparently understood this as well, although it failed to
draw the obvious legal conclusion (77a-4 et seq.).
2. Petitioners incorrectly assert that the court of appeals
decision embraces the “freedom now” theory of seniority
relief, instead of the judicially accepted “rightful place”
type of remedy (Petition at 16).14 In fact, the court of
appeals tailored its seniority remedy with great care to
take account of the limitations inherent in “rightful place”
relief. See, e.g., A. 52, text set forth at pp. 4-5, supra, and
part (3) of this Argument. The court of appeals’ adherence
to “rightful place” relief is further demonstrated by its
reliance, in the part of the opinion dealing with the dove
tailing remedy (A. 48-53), on several major cases which
applied rightful place” relief: Local 189, United Paper-
makers and Papenvorkers v. United States, 416 F.2d 980
(5th Cir. 1969), cert, denied 397 U.S. 919 (1970) [at A.52
n.5]; United States v. Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Co.,
471 F.2d 582 (4th Cir. 1972), cert, denied 41 LW 3554
13 The Petitioners do, inaccurately and misleadingly, cite evi
dence tending to show that topping and bottoming would result
in some relief in a reasonable” time (Petition at 13). It remains
beyond dispute that dovetailing would accomplish the desired
merger much more expeditiously.
14 Under the “freedom now” black employees who have been de
nied job opportunities in violation of Title Y II mav be allowed,
under some circumstances, to displace incumbent employees. Under
the “rightful place” theory, black employees get an adjustment of
their seniority standing with regard to future job vacancies arising
ngthe ordinary course of an employer’s business. The two terms
originated and are thoroughly discussed in Note, Title VII, Senior
ity Discrimination, and the Incumbent Negro, 80 Harv. L. Rev.
1260,1268 (1967). The terms were judicially discussed and applied
m the seminal ease of Local 189, United Papermakers & Paper-
workers v. United States, 416 F.2d 980, 988-989 (5th Cir 19691
cert, denied 397 U.S, 919 (1970). ' ’ ’
11
(1973) [at A. 49 and A. 52 n.6] ; Robinson v. Lorillard
Corp., 444 F.2d 791 (4th Cir. 1971), dismissed 404 U.S.
1006 (1971) [at A. 51]. There is no substance to Petition
ers’ unsupported allegation as to the theory on which dove
tailing relief was founded.
3. Petitioners assert, in the face of all the evidence, that
“business necessity” precludes the merger of separate
seniority rosters by dovetailing (Petition at 9-10, 13). The
“business necessity” test,15 endorsed by this Court in Griggs
v. Duke Power Company, 401 U.S. 424, 431 (1971), is
applicable wherever any employment practice has an ex-
elusory impact on black employees, as the dual seniority
structure obviously did here. “If an employment practice
which operates to exclude Negroes cannot be shown to be
related to job performances, the practice is prohibited”
{id.).
On this record, it is abundantly clear that the petitioners
have failed to demonstrate any reasons of business neces
sity which should be accepted as a bar to the dovetailing
15 The Fourth Circuit most fully spelled out this test in Robinson
v. Lorillard Corp., supra, at 798:
The test is whether there exists an overriding legitimate busi
ness purpose such that the practice is necessary to the safe
and efficient operation of the business . . . [t]here must be
available no acceptable alternative policies or practices which
would better accomplish the business purpose advanced, or
accomplish it equally with a lesser differential racial impact.
All the other Circuits which have formulated a business necessity
standard are in substantial accord. E.g., United States v. Bethle
hem Steel Corp., 446 F.2d 652, 662 (2nd Cir. 1971) ; United States
v. Jacksonville Terminal Co., 451 F.2d 418, 451 (5th Cir. 1971),
cert, denied 31 L.Ed. 2d 815 (1972) ; United States v. St. Louis-
San Francisco By. Co., 464 F.2d 301, 308 (8th Cir. en banc 1972),
cert, denied 41 LAV 3377 (1973); United States v. N.L. Industries,
Inc.,------ F .2d------- , 5 EPD 1)8529 (8th Cir. No. 72-1143, March 28,
1973). See also United States v. Chesapeake & Ohio By. Co., supra
at 586.
12
remedy. The most conclusive proof is that the N & W,
which under the Federal Employer’s Liability Act, 45
U.S.C. §§ 51 et seq., and applicable ICC regulations has the
primary responsibility to assure safe and efficient opera
tion of the railroad (Petition at 10), has repeatedly taken
the position that dovetailing is a practicable remedy. At
trial, N & W, representatives testified that dovetailing is
feasible (579, 603, 608, 631) and that N & W had in fact
even proposed dovetailing to the UTU (579, 603, 610). On
appeal, N & W held to this position and made it part of its
defense. The court of appeals appreciated the weight of
this evidence (A. 50).
The court’s opinion also aptly stated the additional rea
sons for rejecting any business necessity defense here:
As a matter of fact, the qualifications for employment
as a brakeman, the entering classification in both yards,
are the same in both the Barney and CT Yards. And
the breaking-in period for a CT Yard brakeman, hired
without prior experience, is a mere five and one-half
days. If an inexperienced employee can qualify with
such limited training, it is inconceivable that an ex
perienced Barney Yard brakeman would be unqualified
to work as a brakeman in the CT Yard, particularly
since one official of the railroad stated that the duties
of a brakeman in the two yards were “basically sim
ilar” . Moreover, at various times during emergencies,
Barney Yard employees have been transferred to work
in the CT Yard. There was no suggestion by the rail
road or the union that their work was unsatisfactory.
(A. 50-51)
In short, the fact is that Petitioners’ dark and gloomy pre
dictions of impending chaos are mere hobgoblins, conjured
up for the sole purpose of preserving discriminatorily-
maintained advantages for its white union members.
13
The court below adopted the business necessity standard
requiring that the employment practice “ ‘must not only
foster safety and efficiency, but must be essential to that
goal’ .” It then properly concluded that, “The record herein
will not support a finding of business necessity . . . as a
warrant for denying unto the plantiffs a [dovetailing]
merger” (A. 51).
4. Contrary to the clear language of the court of appeals’
instructions, Petitioners contend that the dovetailing rem
edy would result in the displacement of “bumping” of in
cumbent white employees (Petition at 17-19). Neither the
opinion itself nor the applicable authorities lend any weight
to Petitioners’ submission, and in fact plaintiffs were not
and are not requesting the displacement of white incumbent
employees as part of the relief.
The court of appeals plainly and clearly stated:
A single terminal seniority roster would necessarily
provide for the preservation of the rights of all in
cumbent employees at both yards and would permit
no displacement of incumbent employees. It would be
limited in operation to bidding for future vacancies
in either yard, and, as plaintiffs concede, would remain
subject to the overriding consideration of basic job
competency. . . . (A. 52)
The court then remanded the matter to the district court
with the further precaution that in formulating a final
decree “the complexities of railroad employment” be recog
nized ; and that the parties be given full opportunity, with
hearing, to submit proposed dovetailing plans (A. 52-53).
If, despite the court’s clear language, the Petitioners fore
see a serious possibility that certain provisions within the
dovetailing scheme would offend the court of appeals’ pre
cautionary language, their remedy is clear. It is to present
14
their specific points to the district court on remand—not
to resort in vague generalities to this Court for a Writ of
Certiorari.
Petitioners’ contention that the nature of railroad em
ployment makes “dovetailing” impossible (Petition at 18)
cannot be countenanced here. Implicitly conceding that this
type of seniority merger would be proper in an industrial
plant situation (id.), Petitioners’ argument would exempt
all railroads from the law of this land, applicable to all
other unionized employees. Even more provocatively, Peti
tioners apparently suggest that this exclusion take the form
of a blanket rule of law articulated by this Court. To
state the proposition sufficiently demonstrates its absurdity.
As the courts of appeals have recognized,16 railroad indus
try seniority systems, while somewhat different from
industrial seniority systems in their specific form, are
nevertheless subject to scrutiny and remedial modification
under the same principles of law. (See pp 15-16, infra.)
There is no exemption from Title VII relief for discrimina
tory railroad employers and railroad unions. The full
measure of relief should be granted as in other industries.
Indeed, the railroad yard situation is on the facts not
fundamentally different from the industrial plant situation.
Petitioners object to the provision of the dovetailing which
would open a job for competitive bidding “if this job is
abolished or they [incumbents] attempt to move to any
other job in the CT Yard” (Petition at 18). In that case,
the job would be “vacant” in the sense recognized by Title
VII courts as triggering the operation of a non-discrimi-
natory job competition. See United States v. Hayes Inter
national Cory)., 456 F.2d 112, 117-119 (5th Cir. 1972). Any
16 E.g., United States v. Chesapeake & Ohio By Co., supra at
587 n. 13; United States v. St. Louis-San Francisco By. Co., supra
at 307; United States v. Jacksonville Terminal Co., supra at 450-451.
15
contrary definition of a vacancy, such as the one implied
by the “top and bottom” plan advocated by Petitioners,
would make it “unlikely” , as the court of appeals found,
“ that he [a Barney Yard brakeman] would ever find an
acceptable opening at the CT Yard which he could claim
under the seniority rights that would be given him at the
CT Yard” (A. 49). In the name of an illusory “bumping”
threat, Petitioners would “freeze an entire generation of
Negro employees into discriminatory patterns that existed
before the Act,” Quarles v. Philip Morris, Inc., 279 P.Supp.
505, 516 (E.D. Va. 1968).
The court of appeals order assures no “bumping” ; it
therefore presents no grounds for review on that issue.
5. The circuits are in full accord with the dovetailing
remedy granted by the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals
in this case. Petitioners’ argument that this decision con
flicts with the relief formulated by the Eighth Circuit in
United States v. St. Louis-San Francisco Ry. Co., 464 F.2d
301 (1972), cert, denied sub nom., Railroad Trainmen v.
United States, 41 LW 3377 (1973), crumbles under analysis.
First, the St. Louis-San Francisco case involved transfer
of employees between two different crafts, 464 F.2d at 303,
304—porters and brakemen. Here, however, all the brake-
men are of a single craft. Second, the Eighth Circuit did
grant carry-over seniority (albeit partial) to black porters,
based on their length of service on the railroad, 464 F.2d
at 311. Thus, the Eighth Circuit agrees with the Fourth
Circuit that merger of seniority roster on a more effective
basis than simple “topping and bottoming” may be required
in railroad cases.17
17 The decision in United States v. N.L. Industries, Inc., supra,
wherein full carry-over seniority was ordered, demonstrates that
the Eighth Circuit believes that entire (not partial) merger is
appropriate where the inter-craft transfer problem is not present.
16
Other decisions are in full accord. The Fifth Circuit,
on facts less compelling as to job similarities than those
present here, ordered a full dovetailing remedy, United
States v. Jacksonville Terminal Co., supra at 457-460. A
different panel of the Fourth Circuit fully explored these
remedial issues and arrived at virtually the same result in
United States v. Chesapeake <& Ohio Ry. Co., supra. There
is no significant difference among the Circuits in dealing
with railroad seniority remedies.
Moreover, the dovetailing remedy in the railroad con
text is precisely the same as the “company seniority”
remedy in the industrial plant situation. “Dovetailing” is
merely the railroad man’s term for merger by company
seniority date. The company seniority remedy has been
adopted by all Circuits which have had to consider the
issue, including the Fourth Circuit in that part of Griggs
v. Duke Power Co., that this Court upheld, 420 F.2d 1225,
1230, 1236 (1970), noted at 401 U.S. 429 n.4. See, e.g.,
United States v. Bethlehem Steel Corp., supra (2nd Cir.) ;
Robinson v. Lorillard Corp., supra (4th Cir.); United
States v. Hayes International Corp., supra (5th C ir.);
Bailey v. American Tobacco Co., 462 F.2d 160 (6th Cir.
1972); United States v. N.L. Industries, Inc., supra (8th
Cir.). Each of these cases flows from the landmark Local
189 decision of the Fifth Circuit, 416 F.2d 980. This Court
can hardly consider overturning now so basic and widely
accepted a minimum remedy as the company seniority
principle. Yet, in challenging dovetailing, Petitioners sug
gest that this Court do exactly that.
17
CONCLUSION
The petition for a Writ of Certiorari should be denied.
Respectfully submitted,
V ictor J . A she
Suite 702
Plaza One
Norfolk, Virginia
R obert B elton-
237 West Trade Street
Charlotte, North Carolina
J ack G reenberg
W illiam L. R obinson
M orris J . B aller
10 Columbus Circle
Suite 2030
New York, New York 10019
Attorneys for Respondents
MEILEN PRESS INC. — N. Y. C. * ^ S * > 219